Kacey3
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Kacey
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2023
- Threads
- 10
- Messages
- 353
- Reaction score
- 475
- Location
- North Texas
- Vehicles
- 2022 R1T Launch Edition; MotoGuzzi V7II
- Occupation
- IT Support Manager
- Thread starter
- #1
I am not the kind of person to complain, and I am generally happy with my R1T and all of the updates that have been released since my purchase back in January 2023. But after having done several road trips in the past 18 months, my biggest complaint is that under certain conditions, when Driver+ becomes unavailable, it will not only deactivate lane centering, but also the adaptive cruise control. On more than one occasion, this has happened at the most inopportune time, resulting in a near-panic response that could possibly make the situation worse.
I understand the limitations of the Driver+ system, and am one of those drivers who trusts it circumstantially... Meaning that I always have one hand on the wheel, I maintain awareness of the road and cars around me, and if I recognize a situation where I suspect the lane centering might react incorrectly (construction, additions of new lanes, increasingly curvy roads, etc.), I am prepared to take the wheel. In fact, there are a number of times where I will simply wrestle control back from Driver+ just because I don't trust it to take a curve like I would, or give leeway to a big rig like I would prefer.
But my biggest complaint is when, despite everything I am looking out for, Driver+ simply disengages and deactivates cruise control with it. While I keep my hand on the wheel, ready to take control, I don't keep my foot hovering over the accelerator the whole time. Resting my feet and knees is arguably the biggest benefit of cruise control - and not just in this vehicle, but in every vehicle I have owned. Over the past week, we drove several thousand highway miles, and on more than one occasion, we were caught off guard by Driver+ disengaging, which would be fine, but as I was trying to catch the wheel and mange our steering, it took me more than a second to realize that we were also dramatically slowing in heavy traffic. At least once, it happened as we were passing another vehicle and trying to merge back into traffic. A sudden deceleration, along with trying to get your bearing as the wheel is handed back to you is just a bit too much.
I am sure there is probably a reason for everything to disengage all at once, and if there is, I'd be curious to learn what that is. But if full disengagement can be avoided, I would much prefer that. It would not only make driving (and recovering from Driver+ disengagement) more pleasurable, but also seems like it would be a safer response as well. I know that Driver+ uses the camera in the windshield to manage not only lane centering but also adaptive cruise control, and it's likely that the situations I am experiencing are related to the camera being obscured or otherwise unavailable, but no such message was presented to me (where in the past I would receive a notification of "front camera obscured").
Nevertheless, my request to Rivian - if in fact the engineers and software developers read this forum - in the event that if Driver+ needs to disengage, it at least leave the adaptive cruise control active, at least for another second or two so that drivers can regain control more reasonably and not be forced to react to everything all at once.
I understand the limitations of the Driver+ system, and am one of those drivers who trusts it circumstantially... Meaning that I always have one hand on the wheel, I maintain awareness of the road and cars around me, and if I recognize a situation where I suspect the lane centering might react incorrectly (construction, additions of new lanes, increasingly curvy roads, etc.), I am prepared to take the wheel. In fact, there are a number of times where I will simply wrestle control back from Driver+ just because I don't trust it to take a curve like I would, or give leeway to a big rig like I would prefer.
But my biggest complaint is when, despite everything I am looking out for, Driver+ simply disengages and deactivates cruise control with it. While I keep my hand on the wheel, ready to take control, I don't keep my foot hovering over the accelerator the whole time. Resting my feet and knees is arguably the biggest benefit of cruise control - and not just in this vehicle, but in every vehicle I have owned. Over the past week, we drove several thousand highway miles, and on more than one occasion, we were caught off guard by Driver+ disengaging, which would be fine, but as I was trying to catch the wheel and mange our steering, it took me more than a second to realize that we were also dramatically slowing in heavy traffic. At least once, it happened as we were passing another vehicle and trying to merge back into traffic. A sudden deceleration, along with trying to get your bearing as the wheel is handed back to you is just a bit too much.
I am sure there is probably a reason for everything to disengage all at once, and if there is, I'd be curious to learn what that is. But if full disengagement can be avoided, I would much prefer that. It would not only make driving (and recovering from Driver+ disengagement) more pleasurable, but also seems like it would be a safer response as well. I know that Driver+ uses the camera in the windshield to manage not only lane centering but also adaptive cruise control, and it's likely that the situations I am experiencing are related to the camera being obscured or otherwise unavailable, but no such message was presented to me (where in the past I would receive a notification of "front camera obscured").
Nevertheless, my request to Rivian - if in fact the engineers and software developers read this forum - in the event that if Driver+ needs to disengage, it at least leave the adaptive cruise control active, at least for another second or two so that drivers can regain control more reasonably and not be forced to react to everything all at once.
Sponsored